State v. Nagle

32 S.W.2d 596, 326 Mo. 661, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 15, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 32 S.W.2d 596 (State v. Nagle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nagle, 32 S.W.2d 596, 326 Mo. 661, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 696 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, this defendant, Carl Nasello, John Messino, Tony Mangercino and three others were jointly charged with the murder of James H. Smith, a traffic officer in Kansas City, Missouri. Severances were taken, and, at a separate trial, the jury found this defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. He was sentenced accordingly, and appealed. [Companion cases heretofore decided by this court are State v. Nasello, 325 Mo. 442,30 S.W.2d 132; State v. Messino, 325 Mo. 743, 30 S.W.2d 750, and State v. Mangercino, 325 Mo. 794, 30 S.W.2d 763.]

With reference to the alleged murder of officer Smith, the evidence adduced by the State is substantially as follows: About 9:20 in the morning of June 14, 1928, several men entered the building occupied by the Home Trust Company on the east side of Walnut Street, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, in Kansas City, Missouri, and, with revolvers and a sawed-off shotgun, "held up" the officers and employees of the trust company and robbed that institution of about $19,000, in money and interest coupons on United States Liberty Bonds. While the robbery was in progress, Messino was seen in the driver's seat of a Buick coach automobile standing in front of the trust company and headed north on Walnut Street. Upon leaving the trust company, the robbers entered the Buick coach, which then was driven north on Walnut Street at a rapid rate of speed, its occupants, seven in number, brandishing revolvers, a sawed-off shotgun and a machine gun, and firing numerous shots in the air. Officer Smith was in charge of traffic at the intersection of Eleventh and Walnut streets, and, when his attention was attracted by these shots, he left his station in the middle of the intersection and ran or walked rapidly south on Walnut Street about fifty feet, in the direction of the approaching Buick coach, where he was shot three times with a sawed-off shotgun by one of the occupants of the Buick coach. He fell, mortally wounded, and died about six o'clock in the evening of that day. Nasello was one of the men who entered the trust company and aided in the robbery, and he and Mangercino were among the occupants of the Buick coach as it left the scene of the robbery. Messino was driving the Buick coach as it proceeded north on Walnut Street. After the Buick coach passed the safety zone at the intersection of Eleventh and Walnut streets, it was discovered that the "safety zone standard" had been knocked down, and, nearby, a nickel-plated automobile *Page 665 door handle was picked up and handed to a police officer. Shortly after the robbery, a Buick coach with six or seven occupants stopped at the intersection of Eleventh and Charlotte streets, where four of the occupants got out. Two of them entered another automobile which was driven north on Charlotte Street, and the other two entered another automobile which was driven south on Charlotte Street. As the Buick coach started east on Eleventh Street, a shotgun was dropped from it, and one of the occupants got out and picked up the shotgun. Then, the Buick coach was driven east on Eleventh Street. On the day after the robbery, partly-burned pieces of some of the interest coupons taken from the trust company by the robbers, two masks, several revolvers, a shotgun, a machine gun and some shotgun shells were found in a vacant house, in the southeast section of Kansas City.

The State did not contend at the trial, and there is no evidence tending to show, that the defendant actually participated in the robbery or in the killing of officer Smith. The theory of the State at the trial was that the defendant permitted Messino to use his Buick coach in the robbery of the trust company with the understanding that he (the defendant) would get a share of the loot. The following is a summary of the evidence adduced by the State in support of this theory: On June 14, 1928, the day of the robbery, and for sometime prior thereto, the defendant owned a Buick coach, and Messino owned a Chrysler roadster, which were kept at the Trafficway Garage in Kansas City. Both Messino and Mangercino drove the defendant's Buick coach "now and then," and the defendant drove Messino's Chrysler roadster "now and then." Messino brought the defendant's Buick coach to the Trafficway Garage the night of June 13, 1928, and the next morning, the morning of the robbery, "about twenty or twenty-five minutes till nine," he came to the Trafficway Garage and got the defendant's Buick coach. "Another fellow," an Italian, was with Messino. Between nine and 9:30 that morning, one of the employees of the Trafficway Garage delivered Messino's Chrysler roadster to the defendant at Thirteenth and Jefferson streets, in response to a telephone call "for it." About 10:30 or eleven o'clock that morning, a garage at 1241 Jefferson Street in Kansas City was rented "for a couple of days," and a Buick coach placed therein, by a man unknown to the owner of the garage. Later that day, the owner of the garage discovered that the garage door was locked with a padlock. After reading a newspaper story of the robbery and the shooting of officer Smith, he informed police officers of the Buick coach in his garage. Messino bought a padlock, that day, from the Bunting Hardware Company. That night, when police officers removed the Buick coach from the garage, the windshield was out, the door handle of the door on the *Page 666 right side was gone, there were "bullet holes over the radiator," and it bore license tags numbered "3-807 Missouri." These license tags were issued to the defendant "on a Buick coach, 1927 model," in 1928, by the Missouri State License Bureau in Kansas City. The missing door handle was the one found in the safety zone at the intersection of Eleventh and Walnut streets. A key to the lock in this door handle and a key to the padlock on the door of the garage at 1241 Jefferson Street were among the keys found on the defendant's person when he was arrested at 8:30 in the evening of the day of the robbery. Another key to this padlock was found in the possession of Messino.

Over the objections of the defendant, Mr. James R. Page, Prosecuting Attorney of Jackson County, in testifying for the State, was permitted to read to the jury a transcript of his stenographer's shorthand notes of a conversation had between him and the defendant in his (the Prosecuting Attorney's) office about noon on June 16, 1928. Said transcript reads as follows:

"The witness Page here reading from statement of defendant as follows:

"Q. Are you Mr. Nagle? A. Yes, sir.

"PAGE: Now, Mr. Nagle, I am going to read to you the statement which you signed over the Police Department and if there is anything wrong about it, any mistakes in it, or any corrections that ought to be made, why, tell me and we will make them — and if there is anything wrong about it, any mistakes in it, or any corrections that ought to be made, why, tell me and we will make them.

"NAGLE: Will I be allowed an attorney?

"PAGE: You know whether or not there is anything wrong about this statement without an attorney, don't you?

"NAGLE: Yes, sir.

"MR. PAGE, reading from statement made by Maurice W. Nagle:

"`My name is Maurice W. Nagle.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.2d 596, 326 Mo. 661, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nagle-mo-1930.